Home /  NGM Research Seminar: Euler systems

Seminar

NGM Research Seminar: Euler systems October 09, 2014 (02:00 PM PDT - 02:50 PM PDT)
Parent Program:
Location: SLMath: Eisenbud Auditorium
Speaker(s) David Loeffler (UniDistance Suisse)
Description No Description
Keywords and Mathematics Subject Classification (MSC)
Primary Mathematics Subject Classification No Primary AMS MSC
Secondary Mathematics Subject Classification No Secondary AMS MSC
Video
No Video Uploaded
Abstract/Media

The Birch--Swinnerton-Dyer conjecture is now a theorem, under some mild hypotheses, for elliptic curves over Q with analytic rank <= 1. One of the main ingredients in the proof is Kolyvagin's theory of Euler systems: compatible families of cohomology classes which can be seen as an "arithmetic avatar" of an L-function. The existence of Euler systems in other settings would have similarly strong arithmetical applications, but only a small number of examples are known.

In this talk, I'll introduce Euler systems and their uses, and I'll describe the construction of a new Euler system, which is attached to the Rankin-Selberg convolution of two modular forms; this is joint work with Antonio Lei and Sarah Zerbes. I'll also explain recent work with Zerbes and Guido Kings where we prove an explicit reciprocity law for this Euler system, and use this to prove cases of the BSD conjecture and the finiteness of Tate-Shafarevich groups.

No Notes/Supplements Uploaded No Video Files Uploaded